thank you for your service, ms. campbell, and for being with us this afternoon. i look forward to your testimony. >> next, congressman holtz will introduce the next. >> think you for inviting the witnesses and convening this hearing. but in one year, 100,000 people are shot by guns, need to ask questions. not all result in deaths. not all are murders. only relatively few are mass murderers. some are an accident, some are suicide. there are personal, family, and societal tragedies in those numbers. within the rights of gun ownership, we must ask the hard questions to find a way to reduce the number of tragedies here. someone who can help us get through the details of this is special agent david chipman, a 25-year veteran from the bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms, and explosives. he served in a supervisory role in the atf in detroit and launched one of the bridge project safe neighborhoods to focus on preventing gun violence. he led the etf national fire arms division here in washington where he developed the violent crime impact team to prevent homicides with